Point Reyes coastal trail in morning fog

Point Reyes: Running the Edge of the World

TRAILHEAD · POINT REYES NATIONAL SEASHORE · MARIN COUNTY, CA

Aerial view of Point Reyes National Seashore, headlands, coast, and Pacific, Marin County, California

The fog moves in from the Pacific like a slow tide, filling the valleys before it crosses the ridgeline. By the time you hit the Bear Valley trailhead you can hear the ocean long before you can see it: a low roar somewhere behind the white. Point Reyes keeps the most dramatic thing for last.

This is a run that asks something of you before it gives anything back. The first four miles are inland. Meadow grass bends under marine wind, Douglas fir grows dense enough to block the sky, the trail runs wide and well-packed and deceptive in its ease. Then the land opens. Then there is a cliff. Then there is the ocean, two hundred feet below, churning white against black rock.

Distance8.2 mi
Elevation Gain620 ft
DifficultyModerate
SurfacePacked Dirt / Coastal Bluff
The historic Point Reyes Lighthouse perched on the cliff at the edge of the continental shelf, Marin County

The Bear Valley to Arch Rock route is the corridor most trail runners reach for here. Eight miles of near-perfect trail design: gradual climb, sheltered forest, then a payoff at the bluff edge. The arch is a rock formation above a sea tunnel carved by ten thousand years of Pacific wave action. Stand at the edge long enough and you will feel the ground vibrate.

The Tomales Point trail is the alternative: longer, rawer, better if you want to run alongside tule elk. The herd is semi-habituated to runners and will watch you pass with genuine disinterest. This is their territory. You are passing through.

"You can hear the ocean long before you see it: a low roar somewhere behind the white. Point Reyes keeps the most dramatic thing for last."
Aerial view of the Point Reyes headlands and Pacific coastlineCoastal grasslands and beach at Point Reyes National Seashore, Marin County

Point Reyes is a peninsula in the truest sense: water on three sides, the San Andreas Fault on the fourth. The land is on a different tectonic plate than the rest of California, drifting northwest at two inches per year. You are running on something that is, geologically speaking, leaving.

Runner pausing on coastal grass overlooking the Point Reyes shoreline and Pacific Ocean

Run here early. Before 8am in summer. The parking lots fill fast and by mid-morning the trail becomes a pedestrian corridor. Come early enough and you will share it with nothing but elk and red-tailed hawks working the thermals off the bluffs.

Aerial view of Point Reyes peninsula, headlands, coast, and seaPoint Reyes Lighthouse at the western edge of Marin County, Pacific belowAlong the coastal trail at Point Reyes National Seashore

OFFICIAL TRAIL MAP · POINT REYES NATIONAL SEASHORE · NATIONAL PARK SERVICE

Source: National Park Service -- Point Reyes National Seashore

Pack Right

Wind on the bluffs runs cold even in July. Bring a wind layer. Cell coverage drops to zero past mile two; download the NPS map offline before you go. Water at the Bear Valley Visitor Center only. Carry two liters minimum.

The run ends where it starts. But the image stays: the white of the wave break two hundred feet below, the brown of the arch, the grey of the fog above. Point Reyes does not give you a runner's high. It gives you something quieter: a sense of scale, and a reminder of what the coast looked like before we arrived.

California Coastal Marin County Point Reyes TRAILHEAD

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FIELD GUIDE
TERRAIN
TRAILHEAD
THE DRIFT
DISPATCH